Wednesday 24 June 2015

once more into the breach

Potty Training
10:17 AM
+
1
0
1
 
 
+Jennifer Armstrong I agree with your post, I was just attempting to clarify what I hear on the net or have read.   It is like when someone can relate to the DSM V or other books/talks that mention the symptoms of a pathology or illness.  It can be pretty easy to think "ya I have dealt with this in my life, maybe I am the one who has the illness or pathology.  
As far as clean myself....does being licked by a cat count?
Show less
Jennifer Armstrong
10:22 AM
+
1
0
1
 
Edit
 
+Potty Training Being licked by a cat would amost certainly count.
A helpful way to look at this is what you are dealing with is psychological dirt.  Anybody who is exposed to pathology (psychological dirt) will have to find a way to clean themselves.  Some do it by projection.  People are superficial, usually, so if they sense you have been contaminated they will try to ward you off and label you as the pathological one, instead of acknowledging what happened and helping you to get clean.
On the other hand, as Nietzsche said, whoever can survive is a strong as a lion.  Such an initiation into darkness makes you much more self-aware and even more understanding of the limits of society and how most people circulate around a narcissistic black hole of some sort.  You can stop wasting your life and start doing something with it that you really want do do.  Only one proviso -- don't ever expect to be fully understood.  The more superficial people are, they more they will treat you, yourself, as a piece of dirt.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vnmxg4h_Mio

No comments:

Cultural barriers to objectivity